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Crate Advice

From wicker to wire, your guide to selecting and using a doggie den.

Jane Musgrave

Page 2 of 2

Ideally, you should introduce your dog to a crate when he's a puppy, the best time to establish household rules. Instead of yelling at your pup hours after he has chewed up a favorite pair of shoes or gnawed through the cushions of the couch, you can put him in his crate so he doesn't get into trouble in the first place. Trainers agree that scolding your dog hours after he has done something wrong accomplishes nothing. Your dog can't equate your hysterical rant with something he did hours - or even minutes - before.

A crate can also help housetrain your puppy. It doesn't necessarily take the work out of housetraining. It just makes it easier to monitor when he has to go outside - and easier to clean up if you don't get to him quickly enough. Put your puppy in the crate, then take him outside after meals and naps, and perhaps when he whimpers, scratches, or paces. Praise him mightily when he goes outside. Soon, he'll catch on.

But buy a crate that fits your puppy. If it's too big, he might use part of it as a bathroom.

You may have more difficulty luring your older dog, unaccustomed to confinement, into a crate. Nonetheless, the same rules for acclimating your dog apply.

 

Choose the Right Size
Get a crate big enough to allow your dog to stand up and lie down comfortably. And put it in an inviting place, where he can still enjoy the household's activity.

Initially, keep your dog, particularly a puppy, in the crate for short amounts of time (five to 10 minutes) while you're home. Sit near the crate until you're sure your dog is comfortable. Then, go to another part of the house for about 15 minutes before returning to check on him, letting him know you haven't abandoned him. Once he can stay in the crate for 30 minutes without anxiety, you can begin leaving the house for short amounts of time - 30 minutes to an hour - or begin putting him in the crate at night while you sleep.

As he becomes acclimated to the crate, lengthen his stay. But never leave your adult dog in his crate for longer than eight hours or your puppy for three or four. Pups can't control their bladders for much longer than that.

After the initial training, your dog need not spend time in his crate when your family is home and can keep an eye on him, Skoletsky says. He uses crates for his own dogs in just two cases: When I can't supervise them or when I'm leaving. Other trainers and owners find crating useful for occasional time-outs to help anxious or overexcited dogs calm down.

Once a non-believer, DiPaolo now says he's sold on crates. I've lost couches, dozens of pairs of shoes and books, important books. He even ate my wife's homework once, he says, remembering Nemo's early days. If I ever got another puppy, I'd definitely use a crate just to get through that teething stage.

This article first appeared in the February 2004 issue of DOG FANCY magazine.

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Posted: Tue Dec 30 00:00:00 PST 2003

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Reader Comments
good article, thank you
janet, bethlehem, PA
Posted: 11/16/2011 4:21:17 AM
We just adopted a new puppy, a Goldendoodle. The breeder put her in a crate at night after we had purchased the dog. By the time she was shipped, the first night, she went right in and I didn't hear a peep out of her till about 7 am. Took her outside and she had held it all night. Great training tool.
Gini, Paradise, CA
Posted: 12/28/2008 4:53:23 PM
Saffron wasn't crated until she was around 12 years old, I thought she would hate it but I was surprised to find at night time she would preferr to go to sleep in the crate before she would sleep on her bed in the bedroom. I am crating Summer Sun and she chooses when she wants to go in or out when I am home. When I am gome she is crated.
Donna, Kent, OH
Posted: 11/10/2007 5:30:26 PM
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